July 24, 2015CONNECTICUT IS NUMBER ONE PLACE TO LIVE
According to a nonpartisan study by Measure of America, Connecticut was ranked the number one state to live in the United States based on the American Human Development Index, which took into account various metrics of health, education and earnings. Representative Henry Genga writes about the study in an op-ed newspaper article. READ MORE

July 20, 2015GENGA JOINS OFFICIALS FOR P&W HISTORIC GROUNDBREAKING
Rep. Henry Genga and his legislative colleagues from East Hartford joined federal, state and local officials Thursday at a ceremonial groundbreaking for Pratt & Whitney’s state-of-the-art, 425,000-square-foot building that will serve as the company’s global headquarters and world-class engineering facility. READ MORE

April 29, 2015LIONS CLUB GIVES AWARD TO REP. GENGA
Recognizing Rep. Henry Genga’s contributions to East Hartford in the past 30 years, the town’s Lions Club bestowed its 2015 Vision Award on Genga at its annual banquet. Genga was involved in the founding of the town’s Emergency Management Services organization and was chairman of the EMS Commission for 27 years. Read the Courant news story. READ MORE

April 1, 2015YOUNG INVENTORS DEMONSTRATE THEIR WORK AT CAPITOL
Rep. Henry Genga on Wednesday hosted children from his district at the Connecticut Invention Convention Day at the State Capitol. The young students joined hundreds of others to demonstrate their inventions.READ MORE

March 30, 2015COMMITTEE OKS ANTI-SMOKING LEGISLATION
The Public Health Committee approved legislation introduced by Rep. Henry Genga that would protect children from secondhand smoke. The bill bans adults from smoking inside a car if a child under the age of six is present. The committee also approved tough new rules on electronic cigarettes. READ MOREREAD NEWS STORY IN COURANT

March 24, 2015REP. GENGA WORKING TO PROTECT CHILDREN FROM SECONDHAND SMOKE
Never giving up on looking out for children, Henry Genga has again introduced legislation, House Bill 6285, "An Act Prohibiting Smoking In Motor Vehicles," that would protect them from the dangers of secondhand smoke. The bill would ban adults from smoking inside a car if a child under the age of six is present. READ MORE